Cubicle dwellers helping cubicle dwellers

Here’s a quote from the Cubicle Dweller’s Survival Page:

The dictionary defines the cubicle as, “a working environment consisting of a number of easily separated walls containing an optional door”. If you are a cubicle dweller, which I believe you are, then this is where you spend your days. A dim space that has become a petrie dish which others come to inspect only to see the progress of their experiment. To find out if you are growing spores. To see if you are multiplying.

That is just all too accurate. Fortunately, the site owner also provides tips and tricks to stay sane.

Laughing out loud in the early morning

At about 3:30 this morning, I found myself staring intently at the ceiling without the slightest urge to close my eyes. Argh. So I wandered over to the TV and let my thumb flip up and down the channels. Then I landed on the arts channel, Bravo, which was showing Buster Keaton in the General.

Buster Keaton in 'the General'

What an amazing movie! Even though I’d seen it before, it was absolutely hilarious. That guy was a genius. The only actor (in my humblest of opinions) who has come even close to Keaton’s mastery of physical comedy is Jackie Chan. I was quite disappointed to see it end, since it was much more entertaining than staring at the ceiling. Heck, it would take at least a thousand ceilings to top that movie.

Anyway, this is an aimless blog entry today, so I’ll just finish up with this.

Bookshelf number two

Continuing what Zel started, here is Bookshelf Number Two.

The titles are blurry again, so here they are in print:



Peter Loeffler, Five Sketches on Gordon Craig (signed)

Hume, Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion

Minasi, The Complete PC Upgrade and Maintenance Guide

the Canadian Oxford Guide to Writing

the Norton Reader

William Shatner, Star Trek Movie Memories

Bruder, Cohn, et al., A Practical Handbook for the Actor

Canadian Content

Talbot, Film: an Anthology

Robert Burns: Poems and Songs

An Anthology of Canadian Literature in English (vols. I and II)

Maximizer Enterprise 2000 Setup Guide (by me, in part)

Samuel Richardson, Pamela

Milton, Paradise Lost

Tomson Highway, the Rez Sisters

Samuel Johnson, the History of Rasselas

Greene, the Age of Exuberance

Defoe, Mol Flanders (Doh. Darn Flanderses.)

Gray, the Other Cinderella

Gurney, the Diningroom

King, All My Relations

Lee, the New Canadian Poets 1970-1985

Timothy Findley, the Wars

Prince, Movies and Meaning

Matters of Life and Death: New Introductory Essays in Moral Philosophy

Maximizer Enterprise 2000 User’s Guide (again, partly by me)

Larry Niven, Ringworld

The Penguin Wordmaster Dictionary

To the person who broke into my car again

What were you thinking? That after five break-ins, you would finally find something of value in my car? I left the glove-box, ashtray, and coin holders open and empty. There was obviously nothing — nothing — in the car. No stereo. No personal belongings. The only loose objects are the spare tire and a pump, which you didn’t take.

No, you just broke in, pulled the wires out from under the steering column and completely failed to hotwire the car again. Seriously, if you’ve been at it this long, and you still can’t figure out how to start a car, you should find another line of work.

And that was a nice touch, opening the sunroof and turning on the lights. I found my car this morning damp and quite dead, you…. you… malicious, brain-diseased little cretin. I hope you get a shard of auto glass lodged in a very personal part of your body that gets infected, turns gangrenous, and is eventually amputated by a drunk chimpanzee with one arm, bad breath, and a rusty bread knife.

A drunk, one-armed chimpanzee with bad breath and a rusty bread knife.

Bookshelf number one

Following in Zel’s footsteps, here is the first bookshelf, from the top down: Bookshelf Number One.

For those of you who can’t read the blurry titles, they are (from left to right):

Hamlet

Anthony and Cleopatra

Othello

Romeo and Juliet

Coriolanus

Love’s Labour’s Lost

Henry IV, Part One

As You Like It

Henry V

The Merchant of Venice

The Taming of the Shrew

Twelfth Night

As You Like It

Much Ado About Nothing

King Lear

Hamlet

MacBeth

Troilus and Cressida

The Tempest

A Misummer Night’s Dream

Richard II


Renée Descartes, Discourse on Method and the Meditations

Jane Austin, Pride and Prejudice

Rudy Wiebe, The Temptations of Big Bear

The Koran

Jane Austin, Persuasion

Frederick Phillip Grove, Settlers of the Marsh

Christopher Marlowe, the Complete Plays

Beatrice Culleton, In Search of April Raintree

Gabrielle Roy, The Tin Flute

Antonine Maillet, Pélagie

Frances Brooke, the History of Emily Montague

Ten Canadian Short Plays (ed. Jon Stevens)

Timothy Findley, Not Wanted on the Voyage

Yves Beauchemin, the Alley Cat

Stephen Leacock, Sunshine Sketches of a Little Town